Beijing takes the yuan global in bid to repel a weaponised dollar


BEIJING: China is putting the yuan front and centre in its fight back against the United States’ unique influence over global money.

President Xi Jinping’s government has been busy striking deals over the past year to expand the ways in which the currency is used, with new agreements linked to the yuan stretching from Russia and Saudi Arabia to Brazil and even France.

While the United States remains the world’s clear financial hegemon, the moves are helping China to carve out a bigger place for itself in the international financial system.

They come at a time when geopolitical strains are growing and global commerce is becoming an ever-more-active battleground.

Antagonism has flared between the two economic titans over issues ranging from trade and Taiwan to TikTok and technological know-how.

Hard-hitting sanctions on Russia have revealed a new willingness by the United States to weaponise the dollar.

Together, that’s done more to promote China’s yuan over the past year than Xi’s government achieved in the preceding decade.

The ramp-up is also a response to China’s shifting position within the global economy as it emerges from the era of Covid-lockdowns with growth running more slowly than it once did and the global push for freer trade in retreat.

That’s spurred leaders in Beijing to up the ante in building the country – and in particular its currency – into an alternative pole for international finance, trade and lending.

The nation is working to demonstrate “that there’s a world outside of the United States and the Western world,” said Adrian Zuercher, head of global asset allocation and co-head of global investment management for the Asia-Pacific region at UBS global wealth management’s office in Hong Kong.

“You’re sending a very strong signal to the United States by basically saying we don’t need you and we don’t need your dollar.”

That message is resonating in some parts of the world.

Unease with the dominance of the United States and the greenback is pushing some countries and companies to diversify away from America and Europe.

The use of the yuan in contracts for everything from oil to nickel is gathering speed, with the currency’s share of global trade finance tripling since the end of 2019.

That’s still a tiny portion of global transactions, and the currency remains tightly controlled by Chinese authorities.

But sanctions that ensnared Moscow following its invasion of Ukraine have added to that pace.

The yuan’s usage in Russian export payments surged 32-fold last year alone.

Xi, who is embarking on his second decade in charge of the People’s Republic, has taken steps to promote the country’s reputation abroad, even as he focuses on implementing reforms and bolstering growth at home.

His first foreign excursions after lifting lockdowns were to key energy suppliers Saudi Arabia and Russia.

Trips to Beijing by Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and France’s Emmanuel Macron were accompanied by a host of new commercial agreements.

And China was central to brokering an Iran-Saudi detente.

With the United States, though, flashpoints have multiplied – from feuds over spy balloons to semiconductor technology.

The ostracism of Russia in the wake of Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine has provided China with an important opening to demonstrate just how the yuan can be used.

It also stoked concern among some nations about being beholden to the dollar and the euro, the two biggest currencies.

Locked out of the central international payments system known as Swift, Russia embraced the yuan for trade, private savings and foreign-exchange transactions. China has developed its own international-payments platform – CIPS – that’s entirely separate from Swift, which has been embraced not only by institutions in Russia, but also by banks that operate in places like Brazil.

“China’s willingness to maintain growth while paving new paths lends itself for other nations to have greater confidence to use the yuan,’’ said Victor Gao, a professor at Soochow University and vice-president of the think tank Centre for China and Globalisation.

“If the United States wants to rock the boat, then China will need to make necessary amendments to meet the challenges.’’ — Bloomberg

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